
Burning Limestone to Make Quicklime and Lime Plaster — The First Synthetic Building Material
Lime plaster is the oldest synthetic building material — predating pottery, metalworking, and even agriculture in some regions. The earliest known lime plaster floors date to approximately 7500 BCE at Çatalhöyük in modern Turkey, where Neolithic builders discovered that burning limestone (calcium carbonate) at high temperature produces quicklime (calcium oxide), which when mixed with water and sand creates a paste that hardens into durable, waterproof plaster.
The chemistry is elegantly circular: limestone (CaCO₃) is heated to approximately 900°C, driving off carbon dioxide to produce quicklime (CaO). Adding water produces slaked lime (Ca(OH)₂) in a violently exothermic reaction. When the slaked lime plaster is applied and exposed to air, it slowly reabsorbs CO₂ from the atmosphere and gradually reconverts back to limestone — the same material it started as, but now shaped by human hands into floors, walls, and waterproof coatings.
Lime mortar and plaster enabled the great constructions of every ancient civilization: Egyptian pyramids, Greek temples, Roman aqueducts, and medieval cathedrals. Roman engineers added volcanic ash (pozzolan) to create hydraulic lime that could set underwater — the secret ingredient in Roman concrete that has survived 2,000 years of seawater immersion. Lime plaster remains in active use today for conservation, heritage restoration, and natural building.
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